Aleppo-NGO Stands with the Armenian Community of Texas during Hurricane Harvey

The Aleppo Compatriotic Charitable Organization (Aleppo-NGO) said in a Sept. 3 statement that it has been following the devastation caused by Hurricane Harvey in Houston and other parts of Texas “with great pain and concern,” and urged fellow pan-Armenian compatriotic organizations to join them in contributing to the relief efforts.

“Our prayers and thoughts are with all the victims of Hurricane Harvey and their families,” said Ani Balkhian, founding president of Armenia-based Aleppo-NGO. “Syrian Armenians fully comprehend the sorrow and pain caused by displacement. We urge the global human community, especially the Armenian Diaspora and the Armenian government, to extend and expand their humanitarian support for the displaced in Texas.”

The St. Kevork Armenian Apostolic Church of Houston (Photo: Artak Davtian)

The hurricane, which struck Houston (and other parts of Harris County) and other coastal towns in Texas on Aug. 25, has thus far caused 51 fatalities, damage to more than 150,000 properties, and the displacement of more than 30,000 people, including members of the Armenian community of Houston.

Though many would not associate Houston as one of the centers of the Armenian-American community in the U.S., the Aleppo-NGO has witnessed firsthand the vibrant nature of the Armenian community organized around the St. Kevork Armenian Church in Houston and its commitment to pan-Armenian causes.

In April 2015, when Armenian neighborhoods in Aleppo were bombarded by al-Qaeda affiliate Al-Nusra, causing destruction and death, hundreds of Syrian-Armenians approached the Aleppo-NGO seeking financial assistance to be resettled from Aleppo to Yerevan. Realizing the desperate situation of the Armenian community in Aleppo, the Aleppo-NGO launched its “Save a Life” program to help resettle as many Armenians as possible from war torn Syria to Armenia.

Between April 2015 and Oct. 2016, the Armenian community in Houston—led by the Parish Council of St. Kevork Armenian Church and its then-chairman Vreij Kolandjian—contributed more than $60,000 to the “Save a Life” program, resulting in the evacuation of more than 160Armenians from Syria.

“In our desperate times of need, the Armenian community in Houston…stood by Syrians seeking a second chance for life in Armenia,” said Balkhian. “We can never ever forget the contributions of the Armenian community in Texas towards Syrian Armenians.”

In February, Kolandjian, along with countless others from the Armenian community in Houston and beyond, had raised a significant amount of money in support of Syrian Armenians. Realizing that the IDeA Foundation had stepped up to the plate to assume to role of financing Aleppo-NGO’s “Save a Life” program, the donors (primarily from Houston) designated more than $75,000 for the sustainable protection of Syrian-Armenian rights in Armenia through the creation of job opportunities for those Syrians already resettled in Armenia, contributing to their economic integration.